What you need to know about B.C.'s so-called murder hornets - Action News
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British Columbia

What you need to know about B.C.'s so-called murder hornets

First of all, don't call them murder hornets, says provincial apiarist.

First of all, don't call them murder hornets, says expert, but remember to run if you disturb a nest

Asian giant hornets are the largest of all hornet species. This specimen was 1 inches (four centimetres) long but they can be up to a centimetre longer and have a wingspan the size of a small hummingbird. (CHEK News)

Some peopleare buzzing with fear over a possible encounter with Asian giant hornets, but B.C.'stop bee expert says fatalities are rare andthere are ways to avoid a confrontation in the first place.

Since thefirst sighting of the species sometimescalledmurder hornets in Nanaimo on Vancouver Island last year, the hornets have been spotted in Metro Vancouver'sWhite Rock, the Cowichan Valley south of Nanaimoand some parts of Washington state.

Provincial apiaristPaul van Westendorp says the hornets tend to nest on the ground inwooded areas and that's where people should be cautious.

"Hornets are [not] going to be flying in clouds around the countryside looking for victims," said van Westendorp Wednesday on CBC Radio'sThe Early Edition,adding that the "amateurish title" murder hornets makes him cringe.

He said the hornets, which can measure about five centimetres in lengthand have a wingspan the size of a small hummingbird, will likely not pursue peopleor petsunless a nest is disturbed.

A closeup of an Asian Giant Hornet is seen in an undated Washington State Department of Agriculture picture obtained by Reuters on May 4. (Washington State Department of Agriculture/Reuters)

So you disturbed a nest...

Unlike a honey bee colony which has thousands of bees, said van Westendorp, an Asian giant hornet's nest will have a few hundred dwellers inside.

If a nest is disturbed, a colony will initially send out one hornet, then more, but only if the intruder remains there.

Van Westendorp advises that if you do inadvertently disturb a nest, it is smart to run.

But, he said, do not run toward a large open space as it makes you more visible to the hornets.

Instead, van Westendorpsays hide in any available cover, such as shrubbery, to make it harder for the hornets to find you.

This particular hornet has a "dagger-like stinging apparatus" said van Westendorp and can sting repeatedly without losing it. The venom they release also contains an enzyme that causes the death of body tissue, callednecrosis, at the point of contact.

"Don't touch the wound after you get stung," said van Westendorp. "Rubbing the site will mobilize venom and irritate surrounding tissue."

He recommends immobilizing the area that has been stung and putting ice on it immediately to reduce swelling.

Carbon dioxide was used to destroy a nest of Asian giant hornets discovered in south Nanaimo in 2019. (CHEK News)

Rare fatalities

The hornet's sting has proven fatal in rare cases.

People who have been punctured by the stinger which can be up to 10 millimetres longliken the pain to a red hot pushpin being stabbed into their flesh.

In Asia, a few dozendeaths each year are attributed to the hornet, most often if a nest is disturbed, said van Westerndorp.

Despite this, van Westendorp saysthat dubbing it the murder hornetis sensationalizing:

"It's too much of a Hollywood image and that is not the case."

He says any sighting of an Asian giant hornet should be reported to the Invasive Species Council of B.C. at 1-888-933-3722.

With files from The Early Edition